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Konference

Workshop: Exploitation in Bioethics

Konference — Exploitation occupies a significant place in certain bioethical debates, particularly within clinical research, commercial surrogacy, biobanking, and organ trade. In these domains, moral concerns regarding, for example, fairness in transaction, decision-making on the backdrop of disadvantaged circumstances, and the burdens of risk of some persons for the benefit of others, are commonly conveyed in terms of exploitation. In most deliberations about exploitation in bioethics, exploitation has a certain tie to a concept of vulnerability: exploitation is particularly emphasized, and has particular rhetorical force, when affecting people in vulnerable circumstances. Some theories of exploitation are directly vulnerability-based, while others are confronted with the stark intuitions that there is something morally unsavory about situations allowing entrance into exploitative relations, despite the presence of (at least formal) consent.
While the concept has gained a certain level of scholarly attention in recent years, it remains muddy and underexplored. The aim of this workshop is to address this blurry picture, believing that the understanding of exploitation and its relevance for bioethics would benefit greatly from further conceptual analyses, examination of implications in terms of appropriate moral responses, inquiry into its components such as benefit or unfairness, and investigations of its connections to concepts such as vulnerability, voluntariness and consent.
Apart from the aforementioned bioethical domains, bioethics at large has been relatively void of considerations of exploitation. Ethical scrutiny of e.g. emerging biotechnologies such as personalized medicine or gene editing, tend to focus on issues of consent, benefit and risk, potentially leaving out relevant concerns of that may be framed in terms of exploitation. Can attention to the concept of exploitation contribute to a more complete ethics of biotechnologies, help organizing and formulating particular ethical concerns, or guide ethically appropriate implementations of certain biotechnologies?
PROGRAMME:
Thursday November 8th
9.00 - 9.15: Coffee
9.15 - 9.30: Welcome
9.30 - 10.30: (KEYNOTE) Erik Malmqvist: Exploitation and Remedial Duties
10.30 - 10.45: Break
10.45 - 11.30: Valeria di Gaetano: Clinical Research in the Developing World: Two Perspectives on Exploitation
11.30 - 12.15: Katla Heðinsdóttir: Exploitation and the Social Value Requirement
12.15 - 13.30: Lunch
13.30 - 14.15: Felicitas Holzer: Egalitarian justice, exploitation, and complicity
14.15 - 15.00: Stanislas Richard: Vulnerability as disenfranchisement
15.00 - 15.30: Break
15.30 - 16.30: Peter Falk: TBA
19.00: Conference dinner (location TBA)
Friday November 9th
09.00 - 9.30: Coffee
09.30 - 10.30: (KEYNOTE) Danielle Wenner: Exploitation, agency, and domination in transnational surrogacy
10.30 - 10.45: Break
10.45 - 11.30: Gulzaar Barn: Exploitation and Permissibility
11.30 - 12.15: Sara Belfrage: Exploitation and not informed consent is what we should worry about when using health data
12.15 - 13.15: Lunch
13.15 - 14.00: Egle Obscarkaite: Exploitation and machine learning
14.00 - 15.00: (KEYNOTE) Ruth Sample: Structural exploitation and expressive content
15.00 - : Farewell reception
Workshop organizers:
Katla Heðinsdóttir, PhD fellow, and Nana Cecilie Halmsted Kongsholm, post.doc., University of Copenhagen.
The workshop is free of charge and open to researchers and students at all levels. If you wish to attend, please register with Katla Heðinsdóttir at kh@hum.ku.dk

Exploitation occupies a significant place in certain bioethical debates, particularly within clinical research, commercial surrogacy, biobanking, and organ trade. In these domains, moral concerns regarding, for example, fairness in transaction, decision-making on the backdrop of disadvantaged circumstances, and the burdens of risk of some persons for the benefit of others, are commonly conveyed in terms of exploitation. In most deliberations about exploitation in bioethics, exploitation has a certain tie to a concept of vulnerability: exploitation is particularly emphasized, and has particular rhetorical force, when affecting people in vulnerable circumstances. Some theories of exploitation are directly vulnerability-based, while others are confronted with the stark intuitions that there is something morally unsavory about situations allowing entrance into exploitative relations, despite the presence of (at least formal) consent.
While the concept has gained a certain level of scholarly attention in recent years, it remains muddy and underexplored. The aim of this workshop is to address this blurry picture, believing that the understanding of exploitation and its relevance for bioethics would benefit greatly from further conceptual analyses, examination of implications in terms of appropriate moral responses, inquiry into its components such as benefit or unfairness, and investigations of its connections to concepts such as vulnerability, voluntariness and consent.

Apart from the aforementioned bioethical domains, bioethics at large has been relatively void of considerations of exploitation. Ethical scrutiny of e.g. emerging biotechnologies such as personalized medicine or gene editing, tend to focus on issues of consent, benefit and risk, potentially leaving out relevant concerns of that may be framed in terms of exploitation. Can attention to the concept of exploitation contribute to a more complete ethics of biotechnologies, help organizing and formulating particular ethical concerns, or guide ethically appropriate implementations of certain biotechnologies?